For far too long, the repositories drop-down has been far from optimal. Something of an embarrassment in fact. While not completely unusable, the drop-down is unwieldy for users with access to dozens of repos:

Old repositories drop-down

Additionally, its appearance never really blew my skirt up.

I’m pretty pleased with what we’ve come up with to address these issues:

Improved repositories drop-down

We now limit the number of repositories displayed to ten. Ten relevant repositories. Plus, the drop-down is no longer an eyesore. Skirt. Blown. Up. (I hope yours is too.)

As always we love receiving feedback from other Bitbucket users. Let us know if you think of a way to further improve this feature.

That’s a consequence of our recent changes. We no longer list every repository to which one has direct access, so the drop-down is no longer canonical. While the old approach worked well for users with access to a handful of repos, we hope the new drop-down will work well for all Bitbucket users.

Great suggestion, would be nice to have more repos displayed in an accessible manner. Perhaps hide any extra info until onhover? So if you had 2 columns, hovering a cell (repo) in the left column would have it expand to cover both columns, to display extra information?

Great suggestion, av. I’ve had an idea as to how we might differentiate branches in an intuitive way, but it’s not easy to describe in words. Suffice to say that we’re aware of this deficiency and are thinking how best to address it.

to be honest since you’re already cutting into the commit messages, might as well put those branch names back in the same spot….and the column with “5 minutes ago” and similar messages could be drastically shortened to even “5m ago”, “9h ago”, etc.

Looks good.nnnI wouldn’t remove dupes as Thomas suggests … ie. items both in Recently viewed/updated, as you lose the information on what you work on (viewed) and what was updated.nnBut I’d welcome if the Recently viewed/updated headers were clickable (or had All link at the right side to them), so we could get complete sorted list of last viewed/updated repos. This would be useful if you work with more than 5 repos actively.nnThanks for your effort!nJan

I wouldn’t remove dupes as Thomas suggests … ie. items both in Recently viewed/updated, as you lose the information on what you work on (viewed) and what was updated.

But I’d welcome if the Recently viewed/updated headers were clickable (or had All link at the right side to them), so we could get complete sorted list of last viewed/updated repos. This would be useful if you work with more than 5 repos actively.

I wouldn’t remove dupes as Thomas suggests … ie. items both in Recently viewed/updated, as you lose the information on what you work on (viewed) and what was updated.

But I’d welcome if the Recently viewed/updated headers were clickable (or had All link at the right side to them), so we could get complete sorted list of last viewed/updated repos. This would be useful if you work with more than 5 repos actively.

Thank you – this is much better than the kilometric dropdown! One thing I’d love to see sometime is a live search to narrow down repos, either on the dropdown or the repo list on the sidebar. That way, if I’m looking for a given repo I can start typing to narrow the list either to that item or down to something manageable.

Thank you – this is much better than the kilometric dropdown! One thing I’d love to see sometime is a live search to narrow down repos, either on the dropdown or the repo list on the sidebar. That way, if I’m looking for a given repo I can start typing to narrow the list either to that item or down to something manageable.

Thank you – this is much better than the kilometric dropdown! One thing I’d love to see sometime is a live search to narrow down repos, either on the dropdown or the repo list on the sidebar. That way, if I’m looking for a given repo I can start typing to narrow the list either to that item or down to something manageable.

In the past, RayBan has been rather effective when it comes to viral videos. Last night, RayBan released their latest video: “Guy Has Glasses Tattooed On His Face”

Under the name In no way Hide Films, RayBan releases viral video to promote their glasses. Within this series, their most effective video yet; the famous Sunglass catching video got over 4. 5 thousand views on YouTube.

Even though not all of RayBan’s videos were this huge of a hit; “The Kiss”, “Human Zoo” and “Streaker” for example , RayBan is text book example of how on-line video can reach a huge number. Via the In no way Hide Films’ YouTube route, RayBan has created a big group of followers, which they can easily provide with compelling content in order to develop a viral effect. And most of RayBan successes contain the so called WTF factor: “Cow Gives Delivery To A Dude”and also the latest video “Guy Has Glasses Tattooed On His Face” leave you with a feeling of ‘what just happened’. Which makes it the right content to pass on to your friends, since you know they will end up with the exact same surprised face as you did.

As said, the “Sunglass Catching” generated over 4. 5 thousand views on YouTube exclusively. However , the video was uploaded to more video portals than just YouTube. Even though YouTube generated by far the most quantity of views, a viral measurement tool will help gain insights in how a video is spreading online and how it’s success, or failure of course , is evolving.

ViralTracker is such an independent third-party viral measurement business, that actions reach, response, ratings and feedback of viral videos, trailers and widgets, in an incredible number of blogs, communities, social support systems and over 350 video sharing portals in more than 50 countries.

Given the success of the other videos, we have questioned ViralTracker to track the “Guy Has Glasses Tattooed To Their Face”, right now in 57. 033 views, to grasp it is viral spread.